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Solar-powered space flight

4. Taking into account atmospheric drag

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Copyright (c) Malcolm Kemp 2009

 

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4.            Taking into account atmospheric drag

 

4.1          The most obvious way of overcoming air resistance early on in the flight is to use a chemical rocket to lift the vehicle above the atmosphere before then deploying the solar collector and commencing solar-powered flight.

 

4.2          It is worth exploring how far up is ‘above’ in this context. We might model the drag force per unit cross-sectional area perpendicular to the velocity vector as .  is likely to be near its maximum value of 2.6, given the shape of the mirror layout, which means that . If we assume that the collector has a mass per unit surface area perpendicular to the velocity vector of, say, 5 g m-2 (see later), and we ignore any other contributor to the mass of the vehicle, then Table 5 shows the maximum speed (at different altitudes) at which the vehicle can travel if we want the drag deceleration to be no more than, say, 1 ms-2 (i.e. 0.1g) We have here used atmospheric densities derived from Kaye & Laby(1986) (above 30 km the edition quoted in the References does not directly quote densities, so these have been estimated by applying the Gas Law to data that is quoted there, high precision not being particularly relevant for our purposes here):

 

Table 5. Impact of atmospheric drag at different altitudes

 

Altitude above earth’s surface (km)

Approximate atmospheric density (kg m-3)

Approximate velocity (ms-1) below which drag would be below 0.1g for arrangements with mass 5 g m-2

0

0.06

50

1.9

100

88

150

1,334

200

3,587

300

11,127

500

46,512

800

239,840

 

4.3          At an altitude of, say, 500km (or above), the atmospheric drag that the vehicle would experience is likely to be negligible in relation to any of the accelerations envisaged by trajectories described in the previous section, even if the vehicle was travelling at close to orbital velocity. At this altitude the pull of gravity is also somewhat less than at the surface of the earth, as is the orbital velocity. Lower values of  per unit lifted mass will then suffice to reach orbit having first reached this altitude with chemical rocketry, particularly if we also use the initial chemical rocket stage to impart horizontal velocity, see Figure 6. This might bring the required mirror mass closer to what might be within current technological capability.

 

Figure 6. Values of  (for different propellant to lifted mass ratios), assuming vehicle travels horizontally with propellant ejected at optimal speeds (subject to an upper limit of 10,000 ms-1) and angles, if chemical rocketry is used to launch the vehicle above the earth’s atmosphere and to impart initial horizontal velocity

 

4.4          Of course, the faster the vehicle reaches before it starts using solar-powered propulsion the greater would be the chemical propellant that it would need to reach this speed. But it is interesting to note that a liquid hydrogen/liquid oxygen chemical rocket as used by, say, the NASA Space Shuttle accelerating from 4,000 ms-1 to the orbital velocity at this height (circa 7,600 ms-1) would itself require propellant of at least circa 1.2 times the lifted mass in this stage (if the rocket had a specific impulse of 450 s). This multiple is not dissimilar to that applicable to an equivalent solar-powered vehicle, if  were of the order of 25 kW/kg.

 

4.5          It might be practical to start solar-powered propulsion at an altitude materially below 500 km (although most probably not from ground level) if the rate of ascent was carefully optimised and if the vehicle only started to acquire appreciable horizontal velocity after it had reached a suitable altitude. It might even be possible for this lower starting altitude to be reached via methods other than conventional rocketry, e.g. by use of air-breathing engines or ultra-high altitude balloons. These possibilities are not explored further in this note.

 


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